Compute Savings Plans cover EC2, Fargate, and Lambda across regions and families. The buyer side guide to coverage math, hourly commit sizing, and the way Compute SP behaves alongside RIs and EC2 Instance Savings Plans.
Compute Savings Plans cover EC2, Fargate, and Lambda across regions, instance families, and operating systems. The discount is lower than the EC2 Instance Savings Plan, but the flexibility is wider. The buyer side play is to layer the two together.
This piece reads as a FinOps reference. Use it with the SP versus RI comparison, the EDP commitment calculator, the EDP discount benchmarks, and the AWS pillar hub.
Reserved Instances locked the buyer to a single instance family in a single region. Workload teams found the lock too rigid. Compute SPs unlock the family, the region, the operating system, and the tenancy.
The Compute SP discount sits at up to 66 percent versus on demand. The discount applies to the eligible compute services. The math is hourly. Coverage flows to the highest discount line first.
| Term | Payment option | Typical discount | Cash up front |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year | No upfront | 27 to 31% | $0 |
| 1 year | Partial upfront | 29 to 33% | 50% |
| 1 year | All upfront | 32 to 36% | 100% |
| 3 year | No upfront | 50 to 54% | $0 |
| 3 year | Partial upfront | 55 to 60% | 50% |
| 3 year | All upfront | 62 to 66% | 100% |
The all upfront option pays the full term commit on day one. AWS rewards the cash with a higher discount. Buyers should model cash cost of capital against the discount uplift. On most enterprise estates partial upfront wins on net present value math.
The commit is stated in USD per hour. The forecast reads the trailing 90 days of compute on demand spend and the migration pipeline. The commit covers the stable floor of usage, not the variable peak.
The two Savings Plan families share a name and behave differently. The Compute SP is flexible across family and region. The EC2 Instance SP is locked to a single instance family in a single region but earns a deeper discount.
Reserved Instances are the legacy commitment vehicle. Standard RIs are non flexible. Convertible RIs allow some flexibility. The Compute SP is the modern replacement for most use cases.
| Dimension | Standard RI | Convertible RI | Compute SP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Discount ceiling | 72% | 66% | 66% |
| Family flex | None | Yes | Yes |
| Region flex | None | None | Yes |
| Service scope | EC2 only | EC2 only | EC2, Fargate, Lambda |
| Modify after purchase | Limited | Yes | Implicit |
| Use case | Locked instance type | Slow change | Dynamic estates |
Five mistakes show up in 70 percent of the FinOps reviews the practice has run on Savings Plan portfolios. Each one is fixable inside one buying cycle.
The eight step checklist below moves an AWS estate from a default Savings Plan posture to a laddered, optimized coverage strategy. Open it at the next FinOps review or 90 days before any major Savings Plan renewal.
A Compute SP covers EC2, Fargate, and Lambda across regions, instance families, sizes, operating systems, and tenancy. Customers commit to an hourly USD spend rate over one or three years. AWS allocates the coverage automatically to the lines with the deepest discount.
The right answer depends on the workload pattern. EC2 Instance SPs earn a higher discount but lock the buyer to a single family in a single region. Compute SPs flex across family, region, and compute service. Most enterprise estates run both side by side.
AWS allocates Savings Plan coverage at the consolidated billing level by default. The allocation flows to the lines that produce the highest savings first. Some organizations turn off sharing at the account level. The default allocation is usually the right starting point for most enterprises because it maximizes the dollar savings even if individual account spend changes month to month.
Yes. The buyer side play is to ladder the commits. Stagger the one and three year SPs across quarters so that the portfolio never faces a single renewal cliff. The laddered approach also lets the FinOps team adjust the commit base every quarter against the actual usage and the migration pipeline rather than every one or three years.
The right answer is a net present value calculation. All Upfront earns a higher discount but consumes cash on day one. Partial Upfront sits in the middle. On most enterprise estates with cost of capital between 7 and 11 percent, Partial Upfront wins on NPV terms.
Compute SP coverage applies to the compute spend before the EDP discount. The EDP discount applies to the net usage after Savings Plan coverage. The Savings Plan layer therefore reduces the spend that counts toward the EDP commit. The buyer side play is to model both layers together when sizing the EDP commit, not in sequence.
Redress runs the Savings Plan review as part of the AWS FinOps and EDP renewal engagement. The work pulls the compute spend curve, models the ladder, and runs the net present value math on payment options. The deliverable is the optimized coverage strategy and the residual commit map for the next term.
Read the related Vendor Shield, the Renewal Program, the Benchmark Program, the Software Spend Assessment, the Benchmarking framework, the about us page, the management team page, the locations page, and the contact page.
A buyer side framework for the next AWS Enterprise Discount Program renewal. Commit sizing, discount tier benchmarks, flexibility clauses, Savings Plan layering, marketplace pass through.
Used across five hundred plus enterprise software engagements. Independent. Buyer side. Built for AWS customers running EDP, Private Pricing Agreements, and Savings Plan portfolios.
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Open the Paper →We ladddered the Compute SP portfolio across 12 quarterly tranches and the cash cost dropped 22 percent without changing the headline commit. The estate now carries no renewal cliff and the allocation policy is documented at the account level for the finance team.
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